Carbonado, the diamond that looks like pizza.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need to chase some kids off my psilphytopsid lawn...
I'm a geochemist. My main interest is in-situ mass spectrometry, but I have a soft spot in my heart for thermodynamics, poetry, drillers, trees, bicycles, and cosmochemistry.
Posted by C W Magee at 12:41 AM 1 comments
Labels: carbonado confusion
Posted by C W Magee at 4:16 PM 2 comments
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Labels: Tricks for young players
I realize that for the last few years, this blog has been sputtering along with a low level of volume and quality. I can offer neither explanation nor remediation at this stage. But I have listed a few of my old favorites below, for anyone looking for straightforward explanations of how geology explains, among other things, sex, drugs, and Rock and Roll.
Phase Equilibria of Pie Crust
Thermodynamics of Hot Chicks
Cetacean Liposuction
Relativistic Obesity
Geologic Lifespan of Jon Bon Jovi
Stars get Lonely Too
Testing the Earthquake-Modesty Connection
Dear Hypothesis
Posted by C W Magee at 11:56 PM 0 comments
In "The best book you've never read", I mentioned that Author Harry Connolly, fantastic Urban fantasy "Circle of Enemies", which was an amazing novel that hardly anyone has managed to get a hold of. It turns out that the Author is launching his next series on Kickstarter. The appeal finishes tomorrow, but anyone interested in getting in on this can still do so, if you read this blog post in the next 12 hours.
Posted by C W Magee at 12:25 AM 0 comments
Labels: Worth leaving the lounge
Posted by C W Magee at 11:43 PM 1 comments
So the government has been shut down for over a week now. What does this mean? NASA is shut down. If you want to learn about the International Space Station, you'll need to learn Russian. The USGS is mostly shut down, except for hazards programs that are on skeleton staffs. On the other hand, the spy agencies are operating as normal. Taxes are still being collected. And you can still register as a congressional lobbyist. So all the unpleasant aspects of government are still business as usual. I guess that's what essential means. The main people suffering are those off work, and small business owners and employees and their suppliers. See the Riprarian Rap to see how non-federal employees get screwed because contracts and grants get delayed or cancelled.
Posted by C W Magee at 9:56 PM 1 comments
Labels: Political prattling
I have been flying home from Korea via SE asia the last couple of days, and reading a few local newspapers. What is happening here is that while the US Government remains shut down, the premier and PM of China have been engaging on a major goodwill tour, offering things like a billion dollars towards a new monorail project in Indonesia, or 40 billion dollars in increased trade with Malaysia over the next four years. In contrast, the US has cancelled the Presidents trip, sending John Kerry in his place.
The local take on this, from the Persian Gulf to Japan and everywhere in between, is that it makes America look weak and unreliable, and that it is a serious blow to the new "Asian Pivot" strategy. China's rivals are worried that this inability of America to project soft power will tip the regional balance too far in China's favor. Whether the bickering factions in Washington are too myopic to see or too shortsighted to care is not entirely clear.
Posted by C W Magee at 6:23 AM 1 comments
Labels: Political prattling
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Labels: Conference confessions, Natural and synthetic disasters